François Thijssen
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François Thijssen or Frans Thijsz (died Oct 13, 1638?) was a Dutch explorer who is famous because of his travel along the South coast of Australia.
He was the captain of the ship 't Gulden Zeepaerdt (The Golden Seahorse) when sailing from Cape of Good Hope to Batavia. On this travel, he ended up too far to the south and on January 26th 1627 he discovered the coast of Australia. This was near to Cape Leeuwin.
Thijssen continued to sail eastwards, mapping more than 1500 kilometres of Australia's coast. He called the land 't Land van Pieter Nuyts (The Land of Pieter Nuyts), referring to the highest VOC official aboard his ship. Part of Thijssen's map shows the islands St. Francis and St. Peter, now known as the Nuyts Archipelago. The ship, which had been built in Middelburg and left Zeeland on May 22 1626, finally arrived in Batavia on April 10 1627. Thijssens observations were included as soon as 1628 by the VOC cartographer Hessel Gerritsz in a chart of the Indies and New Holland.
This voyage defined most of the southern coast of Australia and discouraged the notion that ‘’New Holland’’, as it was then known, was linked to Antarctica. Much later, Thijssens findings led Jean Pierre Purry to propose a Dutch colony on the mainland there in 1717-18. In his 1726 novel Gulliver’s Travels, Jonathon Swift placed Lilliput and Blefuscu near the unimaginably remote Nuyts Archipelago a hundred years after their discovery. Indeed, present day South Australia would not be visited again by Europeans for 165 years, when in 1792 the French explorer Bruny d'Entrecasteaux searched there for his lost compatriot La Pérouse.
Thijssen took the ‘’Gulden Zeepaerdt’’ back to Middelburg on a 1629-1630 voyage. He was captain on the ship ‘’Valk’’ which sailed in 1636 from Zeeland to Batavia. Later, this ship perished near Pulicat in southeast India on October 13, 1638, though it is unclear if François Thijssen was its captain at the time.
[edit] Sources
- Michael Pearson Great Southern Land. The maritime explorations of Terra Australis (2005) (published by the Australian government department of the environment and heritage)
- Data on trips of the VOC ships ‘’Gulden Zeepaard’’ and ‘’Valk’’